Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 68, No. 311, Ed. 2 Thursday, February 6, 1958 Page: 3 of 4
four pages : ill. ; page 22 x 15 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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"Top Steret’ Label HU
4
Keyed Up
—all because he left the key» in 3
Halt Asked
about the bills in a case like
858
6’
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Victor Will
I
Decide Soon
On Nev Race
tion so they can govern them
Victor Wickersham former con
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2
Just Armed...
From ZALE'S
ment ani insist on the right to only method available to
write the laws and have them money
properly administered."
Exclusively Ours!
Home
611
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Sweater
I
Wickersham, who re-established
7
absence of specific statutes M tion
proposed expansion of Fort Sill to
authority for their decisions on
"It is generally conceded that make room for missile experi-
Spectacular
He was in Tulsa Wednesday
k
1
wrote, '.but the manner in which southwestern Oklahoma farmers
ment for another expansion of
criticism for the association '
$1.%
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Manufacturer’s Closeout
of Bulky Knits in Orion
+
Regularly 10.98-17.95
1
hazard
“ I
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788
/
l‘ sdir
year on February 19.
pedestrians," he stated
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9,
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£
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ess *
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the new antiseptic mouthwash!
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Oreil Ute Dir., Merrts Meim, M X
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would prevent government officials from using the
language of a 1789 law dealing with the handling of
Warning Given
Epilepsy Group
By LEONARD JACKSON
Brems Sirdm let R Meh M
Bee Cashei M Mete* State
Times, said people in a democra- sent to Mrs. Maggie Burns, the
cy must have access to informs association’s executive director
opinion that it does constitute a Wednesday, which opens the 40-
hazard both to motorists and day period of Lent, (alls this
‘ The ANPA believes favorable
action by the congress on this
it Pr te
FMuw Ta
mended for your efforts in what conferring with U. S. army eo-
is certainly a good cause," he gineers in an effort to help some
Wickersham to run. The former
representative said be has been
urged by a number of persons
NEW— Orall’s entirely new—the bright, red antiseptic mouthwash end
gargle with the pleasant wake-up teste. Even children will love Orall’s flaverl
both the Oklahoma City and Tulsa
approaches to the Turner turn-
♦
4
Feather-light Fortuna
Fortun-aire Girdle
holding information
Steinman said passage of the
legislation will demonstrate the
motoring public doesn't approve
of the roadblock type of solici-
Pope Makes Grant
VATICAN CITY _ Pope Pius
fraternity. Sigma Delta Chi
Pope, executive editor of the
Courier Journal and Louisville
ggg
. i
Brewn » Spertsweer, M FI Mein $.
Brewa’s Cepitei HIM, Second Pleor
gressman from the sixth district. m
said Thursday he will decide in
about 10 days whether he will
seek another term
Wickersham was defeated in
1956 bv Rep Toby Morris, Law-
Ion. Up to then he had served a
Heanb.to.Heart Gilt
)
go i
Er g
THE DAYS had gone to Ed-
mond that Sunday afternoon to
visit his mother, Mrs. Lucille
Cartlidge.
P}
4%
partment of Renfro's car.
He was jailed for investigation
on a complaint charging posses-
sion of gambling paraphernalia.
a
a
BEHER than old-style antisepties that "smell like a hospitel"I With Oref,
there’s no telltale antiseptie after-odor.
Death and Heartache ended the hopes and dreams
of young John Henry Day and his wife, Charlene.
BETTE R thanteth pastes— they merely mask mouth odorsl Orall kills meuth
bacteria that cause 9 out of 10 cases of bad breath.
BETTER than wishy-washy, non-antiseptir meuth washes I They can’t kill
odor-producing germs the way Orall does.
to operate the
for Epileptics"
I
1
1
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f
NO DOWN PAYMENT
OMN TONIGHT!
'Records Are Hidden'
"Such interpretations as to the
explained "How will anyone be
able to tell him? Will he ever
accept it?"
This does not speak for the
impact on Charlene’s survivors.
fit MSMBM
$75
The strength of nylon • the absorbency of
coHon • the feel of silk • the weight
of a feather
if
4
Vsn "22 d
4,2
Panty or straight
with front panel
only.
5.98 /
(
what they will make available to you and the volunteers working ment and development
the public. 1“ - ■
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complaint* received by his office
from the public," Steinman said and the sheriff's office that the
Publie Protesting
Berry said it appear* from
formation
Law's intent Disterted
The officer* wrote out a ticket J
for leaving keys in a parked car. •
and then found the owner visiting. *
a woman in her apartment.
The man identified himself as *
Johnny Wayne Renfro, 32, Long- •
j view, Texas, and told the officers :
he was a professional gambler. •
active interest of the congress in
a free flow of information to the
people and it will encourage
more active participation in gov-
ernment by the American peo-
pie "
The county attorney called on V
the Oklahoma Epileptic associa -/h
tion Thursday to halt roadblock •
Fort Sill about 1» months sgo A 1
Earlier this week it was dis N
closed that petitions are being ek
circulated in four counties of * -
southwestern Oklahoma urging
committee
Twe Spokesmen Heard
Similar views were expressed
in testimony by James S Pope, solicitations
Louisville, Ky, representing the 10 stop it
.raise total of 14 years from the sixth
Hope district. However the stretch had
Youth’s Mind Is Closed to Death Gamblers
Road Block
ing systems into a claim of au
thority to keep the filing cabinets |
locked and the records hidden
!
A
2N
ooum PROTECTION WITH ORALL-isestringenteswellasentiseptie Orel helps teme end firm yeur gums 0s»deunaes
your mouth asikila milliom of bacteria.
6.6
The association has come un-
den who Wickersham defeated
,-----. --- organization after one term
of a law passed in the adminis- clears an average of S50 a day
tration of George Washington and “ "
BeA
k,
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or face legal steps
A Texas gambler was in the 3
Here’s ths garment theft cen-
siderat. of YOUTH! It recognizes
your need for firm cotnrol tedey
... end yeur desite te meintain
yew muscular supplenes foraver.
Firm tumm eontrol panel,
slightly longer thigh contrel,
• LM.L Whata,
9*7 V
AXN
law concerning the keeping of
records and establishment of a
filing system a member of the board of di- his home at Mangum last May.
He said officials use the law in rectors of the epileptic associa recently voiced opposition to the
proposed legislation is the only tat ion
solution to preserve for the peo He pointed out the city council
pie their right to know what their has under consideration an ordi-
public servants are doing." he nance prohibiting it as a traffic
9
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114-45
ccouuen
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AHrA
Luxurieusly sef+ and beeutiful bulky knit
(fashien’s sweaters, perfect fer
present seasen ensembles end jut right
fer cever-up ell ummer. Jewel trim
cardigan and dress maker styles.
White, pink, blue, lilac, aqun, black. 34.40.
selves properly He said there der considerable fire in recent
should he more 'top public,’ and days for its roadside solicitations
Um top secret government in It has operated roadblocks on
in this campaign are to be com
ard
Berry's request and warning
were contained on a letter he
■Oto!
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eye-opem
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oul,
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designed as a "housekeeping ’
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‘Lift News Lid,’
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OKLAHOMA CITY TIMES •
THURSDAY, FEI. 6, 1958 3
Steinman Mid government NE 13.
heads have "distorted ’ the intent Reportedly t h e
MW
''M
added
The legislation being considered "I, myself, have been solicited XII has given permission for
by the committee would add a in this manner and have ob- evening distribution of Ash
line to the law specifically bar- served this type of activity at Wednesday ashes in Roman ,
ring its use as authority for with-1 various intersections by other or Catholic churches that hold eve- ■
ganizations and it is my personal ning celebration of the mass. Ash '
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this." Dewey said “I'll pay
them it won’t he easy The
loss of Charlene is whst
counts."’
\
$
TME UNDERCURRENT is
that Day himself does not
know she will be buried Thurs-
day: that the Charles Dewey
family. 3613 8 Roff, Charlene's
parents, put up everything they
had for the funeral; that Dewey
does not have a job.
There were two children in
the crash — Donald Richard
Gehman and Michael Ray Geh-
man of 1941 NW 10. Donald
was unconscious for 134 hours.
The Gehmans also have gone
their limit on the bills
Who can say what effect the
accident will have on the future
of the two children. For that
matter, on 77-year-old Thomas
J Collier, of Edmond, driver of
the other car. He also was in-
jured.
WHAT OF THE effect on
John Henry D s y himself
when he learns the truth'
All he knows is that he is
in the hospital with pneumonia
His wife has not visited him
because "he thinks she is sick
with the flu," Mrs. Gehman
meaning of the statute have
changed the law from authority you are going about it is getting settle claims azainst the govern-
to keep records and set up fil
* Aftermath of a Tragedy
I ----------------- ) ■ ,i
"I haven’t fully made up my ‘
soliciting funds from motorists mind," Wickersham, here for the
Berry said he waa requesting s day, said. "I will know in the next
halt to the roadblocks not only days—perhaps 19 days."
m county attorney but also as
Southern Newspaper Publishers James W Bill Berry said set-
association, and by Clark Mol- ting up "blockades" at road inter-
lenhoff of Washington, speaking sections in the county to solicit
for the professional journalistic money constitutes a traffic hat
• , »
C. H Hall Mid they observed •
the car parked in the 400 block •
. SW23and noticed the keys were •
Things had not been rosey in the ignition switch, a viola- :
to be sure. A minor business tion under a recently-enacted
venture in a cafe had not gone city ordinance. ;
well enough though Day and
the Gehman family had put
everything they had into it
"But the kids weren’t’ wor-
ried,” Mrs. Gehman said. "At
least not on the surface. People
of that age seldom worry "
In one splintering instant,
it was all over The detectives found several
think pairs of dice and decks of cards
i like 1 and a gas gun in the glove com-
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Mr*. Dewey, her mother, and
her four brothers, Jerry, Ches- Oklahoma City pokey Thursday *
ter, Kenneth and Danny. 1-----ha 1d ““ L— —
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_____1___
' 36
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Myce. J x
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' addha
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what their public servants are doing.”
The ANPA endorsed proposed legislation that |
Mollenhoff, Washington corre- pike, paying zirls 11.50 an hour to
spondent for Cowles Publications, do the soliciting
said congress should "stop being $50 Teken Daily
s third-rate division of govern Mr* Burn* insists this is the
action “to preserve for the people their right to know 1
bb. "ggg
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He Special Righte
Steinman Mid newspaper* did
not want to obtain information
that would hurt national security
and Ilfat the proposed legislation
would not affect existing laws re-
quiring secrecy in such matters
"Newspaper editor* and r»
porter* have no rights beyond
those of all other American citt
zens," Steinman went on. "We in
the newspaper business must
pursue vigorously various types
of non-security government infor-
mation solely in the interest of
serving the public by supplying
Information our citizens must
have in order to express their
views on the operations of their
government in our free society."
He Mid passage of the pro-
posed change would eliminate an
"unjustified . . . claim of author
ity" to withhold information;
clarify the congressional intent
to decide what type of informs
tion should be withheld by pass-
ing specific laws, and notify the
publie and government official’
that congress "desires to pro-
mote a free flow of information
to the public."
Both Pope and Mollenhoff de-
scribed the proposed legislation
a* a potentially important step
forward in the fight against what
Pope called a rowing tendency
toward secrecy through “mere
executive whim.”
Pope said the change would do
more than clarify a routine law.
adding;
"It will he a symbol of the
determination of this congress to
put the handling of public busi-
ness on a saner, more responsi-
ble basis."
Mollenhoff said he. Sigma
Delta Chi Chairman V. M New-
ton jr. and Theodore F. Koop of
CBS were told by deputy Attor-
ney General Lawrence E. Walsh
last month that there wax mis- (
use of the housekeeping statute,
but that this should be corrected
by administrative action instead
of law.
"It would take 50 years," Mol-
lenhoff said, "to persuade, coax,
prod and herd the various agen-
cies into a position where
would voluntarily restrict them-
selves from using the housekeep-
ing statute* as authority t hide
records.
Educator Dies
BIRMINGHAM. Ala In—Dr
H L. Euler, 66, lecturer on psy-
: chology at the University of Als
bama extension center since
1953, died Wednesday Euler,
who was born in Topeka. Kan ,
had taught in Kansas before go-
ing to Alabama.
Orall...
I
1
"A PERSON cant
records to give them the
blanket right to withhold •
information to which the
public is entitled.
The ANPA view* were con-
tained in a statement by Col. J
Hale Steinman to the house gov-
ernment information sub-commit
tee headed by Rep. Moss <D..-
Calif.) Steinman is publisher of
the Lancaster (Pa ) Intelligencer-.
Journal and New Era, and chair-
man of the ANPA federal law*
eq.
*
By BOB LIB
John Henry Day jr. Km hi
his hospital bod, his clouded
mind telling him that his wife
is well at home and that it
was pneumonia that put him
there.
He’s forgotten about the au-
tomobile crash near Edmond
a week ago that killed his 16-
year-old bride of four months
He doesn't know about the
funeral Thursday afternoon.
Doctors My it might kill him.
THEY MY Day, 21, is still
on the critical list. In mo-
ments of full consciousness, he
takes out his wife's picture
and cries. Part of him must
know; the other part refuses
to accept it.
This is the aftermath of
tragedy.
When Mrs. Patsy Ann Geh-
man. Day s sister, told the
story Thursday, she couldn i
restrain the sobs "We just
don't know what to do. All in
one day! How’ Why’” she
Mid
THE HIGHWAY patrol
might be able to say what
caused the accident that in-
jured five people and eventu-
ally led to the death of Mrs.
j Charlene Belle Day. The rea-
son might be written off as
carelessness.
But for the heartaches yet i
। to come, the innocent people
I who must pay, there is no
why or how.
Charlene died Wednesday in
an Edmond hospital after a
week's fight for life. That is
the surface story.
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22 W COMMfSCt V onummouacm
Congress Urged |
WASHINGTON (R — The American Newspaper
Publishers association Thursday called for congressional
/culture^
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his parked automobile.
Detectives R. O. Rusche and 2
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 68, No. 311, Ed. 2 Thursday, February 6, 1958, newspaper, February 6, 1958; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2001283/m1/3/: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.